Great book that goes along with the book The Year of the Flood. This book partly takes place before and during the events of the other book. About a future where splicing genes (and the effects) are part of life.

This book goes into detail about memory. How it was first identified, how world champions train their brains to memorize reams of information, autistic savants and possibly those faking it. It was a facinating read! I highly recommend it.

Author: Isabel Wilkerson
Stars: 5
Review by: Jelsey
Destination: from the US South to the North & West

The Great Migration refers to the movement by African Americans from the southern states to the northeast, the midwest, and the west between roughly 1915 and 1975. By following the lives of three individuals, the author explores the reasons behind the migration, how individuals adapted to their radically new lives, and how the migration of almost 6 million people affected the face of America. Through Ida Mae Gladney, who left sharecropping and prejudice in Mississippi for Chicago; George Starling, who fled for his life from Florida to Harlem; and Robert Foster, who left Louisiana for a medical career in California, Wilkerson provides a storyline that personalizes the rich history of this era.

The 2nd book in this series, brings us back to the MS Delta with a defunct "Daddy's Girls" trying to keep her family home from ruin. A DG turned sleuth tries to find out who murdered a famous friend. Romantic troubles, history and other twists and turns make it an interesting read. Great for the lazy, hazy days of summer.

A must read for any Lucille Ball fan. Written in the 1960s by Lucille herself, she takes her readers all the way through her life, from her humble childhood in Jamestown, NY, to her modeling days in New York, her start in Hollywood, her marriage and romance with Desi Arnaz, and of course, her infamous success with I Love Lucy. She provides an inside glimpse of her life and all the ups and downs along the way. A wonderful read, and told in the first person--and as the book claims you can almost hear Lucy reading the story to you. If you are a true Lucy fan (either of the show or the actress, or both!) this is a must read for you!

Having gone to school in Milwaukee, this book caught my interest. This is the 3rd book in this series but was the earliest available immediately at my library. It is a fun, up-to-date female sleuth story. The story is centered around a recently divorced woman who now co-owns a coffee house. She and her friends are pulled into solving a mystery. Common for this genre but the settings, character interactions, humor make it a good read. I can't wait to start the series from the beginning.

This appears to be the first book in a new series by this author. She introduces an elite government team that specializes in the paranormal. She even jokes about the X-files. Mystery, romance and more make this book a good read. Glad the 2nd book is out now too.

I orignially picked this up thinking that it was a Debbie Macomber novel, not realizing that it was three short stories by three different authors. The first two were fun (although predictable) light reads. The third story left something to be desired, though.

Author: Jan Karon
Stars: 2
Review by: L.Z.
Destination: IrelandUsed to LOVE the Mitford series and all of Father Tim's adventures. Unfortunately, I just could not get into this one. Did not seem nearly as entertaining or enjoyable...and in fact, I could not even force myself to finish it!

There are several cute tales written from the point of view of a dog, but this is special. This is a sensitive, wise, heartfelt story of life and death, relationships, living and forgiveness as seen through the eyes of a very wise dog.

This was one of the most amazing books I've read. It just goes to show, everyone has feelings, and you can't always hide them. That it's okay to let them out, trust people, and maybe just maybe fall in love.

This book of "laughter and reflection" gets off to a slow start. Things that might be hilarious if said by Carol Burnett aren't always funny in print. That being said, the stories get better and funnier and, especially if you are old enough to remember The Carol Burnett Show and people of that time, it is a good read.

This was about a private investigator, Tess, who is confined to bed rest near the end of her pregnancy. She watches a woman in a green raincoat outside walking her dog everyday until the day Tess sees the dog running through the park alone. She adopts the dog and then tries to solve the mystery of the missing woman in the raincoat from bed. The book is a light, fast, funny read reminiscent of Hitchcock's Rear Window. Very enjoyable!

Friday, July 29, 2011

Here are some new titles coming out this week. Check them out from the library and see where they take you…

Cold Vengeance by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child (Grand Central)

Seeking revenge after his wife Helen is murdered, Special Agent Pendergast chases the killers from Scotland to New York City and into the bayous of Louisiana and discovers that Helen may have been a collaborator in her own death.

Retribution (Dark-Hunter Series) by Sherrilyn Kenyon (St. Martin’s)

Brought together by an angry god and chased by ancient enemies out to kill them both, hired gunslinger William Jessup Brady and orphaned vampire-raised Abigail Yager must find a way to overcome their mutual hatred or watch as one of the darkest of powers rises and kills both the races they've sworn to protect.

The Wild Rose by Jennifer Donnelly (Hyperion)

In this conclusion to the enchanting trilogy set in 1914 during World War I, polar explorer Seamus Finnegan tries to forget Willa, a passionate mountain climber, as he marries a beautiful young woman back home in England.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Three lost souls arrive in Athens, each escaping from something, each looking for something, never dreaming they will find each other, their lives intersecting in unusual ways that will have far-reaching, long-lasting effects for all of them. Rebecca, a gifted artist arrives in Athens from rural France to learn how to live in her own skin and to work on her art, hoping to assemble a portfolio to bring back to Paris. George’s love of ancient languages has brought him to Greece, his social skills lacking in spite of his New England prep school education. Henry is an archaeologist digging up the past, drinking too much, never considering his own future. As the three forge tentative friendships and love relationships, they slowly begin to live that summer, only to have a tragedy befall them, one that has surprising effects on everyone and change things in ways no one could have foreseen. Almost ethereal in its telling, Van Booy explores love, loss, the loss of love and the loss of oneself as he reveals things in all of us that we’d rather not see and the surprising places we find ourselves. Kaleidoscopic in nature, the story reveals itself a little at a time, surprising at each twist and turn. Sultry in nature, the steamy Greek Isles set off this story of love and self perfectly.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

An English woman travels to India in the 70s to try to better understand why her grandmother left her husband to live in India during the 20s. The sory of leaving English life and going Indian, explored by other English authors, is presented through the eyes of the granddaughter who also succumbs to the allure of India. A good story.

The influence of the times in which Stanley Ann Dunham lived, her genealogy, her personality are detailed in this probing and thorough biography. The research of Janny Scott, the author, compiled matches the detailed style of Stanley Ann Dunham Obama Soetoro's record keeping . What if she had a laptop?

This is the first book in her series where she introduces Sarah Booth Delaney, the new sleuth in town. A little paranormal activity makes this series different and the Southern ways of life make it charming. The twist at the end makes me want to continue with the series.

Not that there is anything wrong with Iowa, but it is not on my top ten places to go and after reading this book I am still not buying a plane ticket. That aside, the book was well written, touching and a bit sad-but also wishing I had siblings to share a history with.

Like the family coming over for the holidays, Stephanie's appearance is anticipated with delight, one gets tired of her if she stays too long, but you are glad to spend time with her while she is here.

This book is a compilation of material from David's website where he posts all his random pranks and annoying email responses. It is hysterically funny--he is a very twisted individual! Not for the easily offended!

Author: Mary Alice Monroe
Stars: 4
Review by: P Kerr
Destination:Milwaukee...US road trip...MexicoThe journey of three women in one family (figuratively and literally) paralleled against the journey of the monarch butterflies on their annual migration to Mexico. Enjoyable ~ moving.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Nonfiction - The story of a poor tobacco farmer whose cells were taken without her knowledge. These immortal cells became important enough to change modern medicine. This book held my interest from beginning to end.

Author: Ann Rinaldi
Stars: 4
Review by: Hermione
Destination: This book is about the short life and reign of Lady Jane Grey. It starts with Henry the 8th's son, Edward, being king, and then ends with Lady Jane Grey's beheading. Really enjoyed it! Lady Jane Grey is cousins with King Edward (Henry the 8th's son), Mary, and Elizabeth. Great historical fiction for those who like the Tudors!

Here are some new titles coming out this week. Check them out from the library and see where they take you…

The Autobiography of Mrs. Tom Thumb by Melanie Benjamin

Mid-nineteenth-century little person Mercy Levinia Warren Bump comes of age in the antebellum south before being invited to join the P. T. Barnum circus, through which she meets her future husband, General Tom Thumb, and pursues limitless international opportunities.

Thick as Thieves by Peter Spiegelman

Carr--ex-CIA--is the reluctant leader of an elite crew planning to take tens of millions of dollars belonging to a disgraced financier, Curtis Prager. But Carr's seasoned pros are wound drum-tight--months before, the man who brought them together was killed in what Carr suspects was a setup.

Full Black by Brad Thor

In the wake of a former U.S. President's appointment to the United Nations, counterterrorism operative Scot Harvath is wrongly implicated for a string of national emergencies and assassinations, a situation that forces him to race against time to uncover the real culprit.

Spell Bound by Kelley Armstrong

Someone has cut off the powers of headstrong young witch Savannah Levine and there's a witch-hunter out to kill her. Savannah, who just tackled her first murder case as a private investigator, now has to rely on mundane skills and her half-demon best friend, Adam, to turn the tables on her would-be killer and recover her magic.

The Stranger You Seek by Amanda Kyle Williams (Bantam, September 2011)

When profiler Keye Street separated from the FBI she knew she still needed to do a similar type of work to feed her addictive personality that caused her problems on the job in the first place. As a private investigator, she serves people and brings in bond jumpers, a thrilling, but not so lucrative, and often dangerous, profession. She has a steady stream of clients, attorneys and bondsmen, who she can count on for work, but when a serial killer begins to taunt the Atlanta Police Department, Lieutenant Aaron Rauser, one of Keye’s biggest supporters, turns to her to assist in the investigation. As the bodies piles up, the department grows more frustrated, and when Keye’s history comes to light, the APD wants her off the case. Never one to leave things alone, Keye unofficially continues her investigation leading to a conclusion that no one will see coming. A debut novel, some of the characters are not as fully developed as they might be otherwise, but Keye is a great addition to the ranks of Southern women in law enforcement and has a past guaranteed to offer a complex future. This smart psychological thriller (with some graphic descriptions of crime scenes) is definitely worth a look at.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Here are some new titles coming out this week.Check them out from the library and see where they take you…

Burnt Mountain by Anne Rivers Siddons

Thayer Wentworth marries an Irish professor and moves into her deceased grandmother's house in Atlanta a short distance away from the summer camp she attended as a child, where she begins to question whether her husband is the man she thought she knew.

Happy Birthday by Danielle Steel

A famous lifestyle arbiter and her shy chef daughter have their lives profoundly transformed on the eve of their 60th and 30th birthdays when a chance encounter in an elevator and a holiday weekend indiscretion lead to new chances at love.

Justice by Karen Robards

Taking a job with a Washington, D.C. law firm after witnessing the murder of the First Lady, attorney Jessica Ford investigates a rape victim's suspicious recant on the stand, a situation that is complicated by the disappearance of Jessica's predecessor.

Split Second by Catherine Coulter

A serial killer is on the loose, and it's up to FBI agents Dillon Savich and Lacey Sherlock to bring him down. They soon discover that the killer has blood ties to the infamous and now long-dead monster Ted Bundy. Savich and Sherlock are joined by agents Lucy Carlyle and Cooper McKnight, and the chase is on

Portrait of a Spy by Daniel Silva

After failing to stop a suicide bomber attack in London, master art restorer and assassin Gabriel Allon is summoned by the CIA and is faced with an organization riddled with dissent--and ill-equipped to deal with the deadly new face of global jihadist terror.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Hard to believe I missed this one, (C) 2003, as an avid Brockmann reader. True to her Navy Seal story style we learn of the story between Wes Skelly & Brittant Evans. Not as intense as her newer stuff but a nice summer romance/suspense read.

This book was recommended to me by my Cousin the Librarian. She told me I would really enjoy it. It isn't my usual type of read and I soon found out it was an "in" book due to the movie. I took the book and it sat. I started it and put down and it sat. It became due and I started to really read it. I couldn't put it down. The book just took you back to a different time in our country as seen through an elderly man. You really felt like you were seeing the world through his eyes. After working in healthcare for a long time I knew of the indignities that come with old age and the book made me truly feel for the main character. The circus tidbits were fascinating. As the jacket blurb stated that the characters continue to live on after the last page has been turn. Highly recommended read if you have not read it yet.

In 1893 wealthy Cora Cash and her mother travel from Newport, R.I., to London, England, to find an aristocratic husband for the beautiful Cora. This book will remind you of Henry James and Edith Wharton in their stories of well-heeled Americans seeking matches with titled Europeans. The contrast between the outgoing, trusting Cora and the old-world aristocrats she must negotiate among makes for wonderful theater. The story is fast moving and told with elegance and wit. I hated to see it end!

Right along the same lines as the rest of this scrapbooking mystery series. Fun, easy read. This one was a slightly disturbing look into the world of domestic violence, with a bit of a surprise at the end.

Graphic novel with great appeal. Colorfully drawn illustrations and unique format. Growing up is not always easy, but shapes what we become. In this case, the author talks about becoming a writer/illustrator candidly and with wit.

This is the first book in a new series by this author that is known for her YA series (Blue Blood, Ashley's, etc.) JJ posted it as a new release and her write up got me interested in giving this book a try. It's about 3 "witches" living on Long Island. There is mystery, old lore mixed with new lore, love and more. I really enjoyed this book and I am looking forward to her next installment.

This is the most current book in the Goldie Schulz, Caterer, series. The plot in general follows the standard format of these types of mysteries. There were some character development twists that made it keep your interest plus the good recipes.

I got out one of my many bookmarks before I started this book. I didn't need it. Back and forth from one chapter in 1942 and the next one in the present, the story moves from a roundup of Jews by French police acting on orders from the Nazi. The chronicle of a little-known event which resulted in the death of 4,000 Jewish children opened my eyes to another horror. It is also a very chilling personal story of Sarah, her brother and her parents. Never Forget.

An easy read - light in nature. About a woman artist with no home who moves from France to Ohio and begins a career as a Carousel Painter. Deals with the idea of a woman working in a factory in 1890, continues with a theft and deals with the levels of society at the time. So mystery, romance and historical piece.

I know I am a few years late reading this past bestseller, but I finally got around to it and loved it!! I listened to the audiobook--it was excellent. I am now ready to read this author's brand new bestseller.

If I can't go there, I read there. I have been immersed in Italy and am a true pushover for these stories about finding ancient farmhouses and restoring them. In some ways I liked this author's experiences, his memories more than Frances Mayles. She comes at it from a privileged southern childhood that she remembers too frequently. Mate and his wife, Candace are also an artistic duo, he a writer, she, an artist, but this pair is more palatable than Frances and Ed. This memoir has references to Etruscan history, everyday life in a small Italian village and of course, gastronomic descriptions that made me hungry.

Author: Robert Goolrick
Stars: 3
Review by: ddlesmom
Destination: Wisconsin"Ralph Truitt placed a notice in a Chicago paper for a reliable wife. She responded saying that she was a simple honest woman. She was anything but honest." Good book about love, loss and revenge. Well written, a bit wordy at times. Main character is very focused on sex, so there is a lot in the book - it gets detailed and is explicit.

Author: James Patterson
Stars: 3
Review by: queenbee
Destination: Rockaway Beach, Queens, NYAny thriller with Irish cops in NY is a win for me. Detective Bennett and his unusual family are a treasure to follow as well.

Author: John Grisham
Stars: 2
Review by: Fernanda L.
Destination: TXThe story is about an innocent man being sentenced to death and at the last minute the real killer wishes to confess. I found some of the characters and their involvement in the case to be far fetched. Definitely strong on the anti-death penalty front.

Author: Jamie Carie
Stars: 3.5
Review by: JamBob
Destination: Canadian Gold Rush 1834Very nicely written....this little novella describes the cold harsh conditions of getting to Canada for the gold rush....I got this book at last year's book club party....the cover of a log cabin in the snow with a sled dog attracted me. Its a story about hope, courage and faith from the perspective of a young lady who makes the journey into the rough and tumble town of Dawson. She finds herself, and her life's purpose through love and perseverance.

Author: Lisa Lillien
Stars: 2
Review by: queenbee
Destination: My KitchenLooking for something new and easy to make. Lots of easy desserts, but lots of egg beaters and fake whip cream. I would add the real food and be happier with the calories and flavor. Good book for weight watchers, point counts are available for many recipes.

Author: Melissa Fay Greene
Stars: 5
Review by: libraryaimee
Destination: Georgia, U.S.This is a memoir about how the author and her husband had 4 biological children and adopted 5 children from Bulgaria and Ethiopia. The family stories are funny and poignant and inspiring! Very enjoyable.

A great read full of mystery, murder, love, suspense, sex, scandal, betrayal, family, tradition, and wine. The story follows the Giambelli family who are international winemakers. At first the book started off a little slow and was slightly confusing with all of the names and characters being introduced, but I'm so glad I stuck with it. I am still amazed at the way the author intertwined everyone and all of the plots she had going on, to make a complete story and a clean packaged presentation. Definite surprise twist at the end. The characters are easy to fall in love with and it was a wonderful book.

About the one you marry vs the one who got away. A good read and definitely relatable to anyone who often wonders what ever happened to "the one that got away". Audiences follow the heroine as she wonders if her great life and great marriage are really the way her life should have turned out...or if she was meant to be with someone else.

The aspect of this book that made it an interesting read for me was that it it gave some insight into one family's reaction to their immigration and how it shaped the next generation. I was able to identify with her descriptions of watching "TV Food"!

You already know what you should eat, and why...but this book takes a look at the emotional side of your out of control eating, and gives some thoughtful insight about why we do it, and how to think about stopping.

If you shop at IKEA, the Swedish company, you have a small pencil, a pad of paper and a tape measure to take notes and help you keep track of things. This book needs similar tools.
The title, "I have lived my life caught between the longing of summer and the cold of winter." is the first sentence of text in a letter recovered from John P. Krassner, who took his life by jumping from a student dormitory s window, his body followed by his other boot with a hollow heel, in the heel a key to the safe-deposit box in the US. In a hand-written text, An honest Swedish Cop.Police Superintendent Lars M. Johansson with his Stockholm address.

Lars Martin Johansson, Police Superintendent of National Bureau of Criminal Investigation, a solitary man, divorced, and in the process of changing jobs gradually and thoughtfully follows his instinct that something doesn't add up.

Across the ocean he goes to Langley, VA and a seminar and a side trip to Albany, NY to visit Sarah J. Weissman, who identifies herself as a freelance writer and Krassner s old girl friend.

Johnansson learns about Krassner as the American nephew of John Fionn Buchanan and his agent from the cold war, Pilgrim Prime Minister of Sweden.

In a New Jersey tie, Buchanan was born in Newark, NJ . He served in Stockholm for four years as appointed assistant military attaché at the American embassy in Stockholm. He left the military and returned to academic life as a professor in contemporary European history at SUNY Albany. But it was his will leaving all of the collected property, including the intellectual property to John P.Krassner that has Johnansson convinced something just isn t right.

The connection between the Buchanan Papers, the murder by the Swedish secret police operative of John Fionn Buchanan, aka Raven, and the murder of the Swedish Prime Minister is one of those elements.
Like the nesting Russian dolls, there are many characters driven by a mixture of neuroses, psychoses, alcoholism, and sex, sex, sex. Russian alliances, The Cold War, Africa, power, the CIA, aquavit, Italian food, Swedish new potatoes with dill, there are endless alleys of stories to turn into and muse and many times get lost.

That is why like the IKEA shopper, the Leif GW Persson reader, needs a small pencil, a notepad and a sleepless night.

Think of Under the Tuscan Sun with more comedy. A british expat goes to Tuscany to operate a B&B. She thinks she can speak Italian and rule the expat community but her perch is rivaled by a spunky American woman who has the same ideas and could do it one better. A light sumer read that you can enjoy with a wine spritzer by the pool. The book offers an interesting twist...it is written in the first person then in the third person so you get the full effect of the comical circumstances. The book even includes local receipies.....Bon Appettito!

Malcolm Fox is an investigator in the Complaints (internal affairs) division of the Edinburgh Police Dept. The death of his sister's live-in boyfriend is somehow related to the mysterious disappearance of a wealthy property developer. The plot has many twists and turns that will keep you guessing. Present day Edinburgh is portrayed as place teeming with construction and teetering on the brink of economic disaster. Other books by Rankin are also highly recommended!

Friday, July 8, 2011

Here are some new titles coming out this week. Check them out from the library and see where they take you…

A Dance with Dragons by George R.R. Martin

New threats emerge to endanger the future of the Seven Kingdoms, as Daenerys Targaryen, ruling in the East, fights off a multitude of enemies, while Jon Snow, Lord Commander of the Night's Watch, faces his foes both in the Watch and beyond the great Wallof ice and stone.

Then Came You by Jennifer Weiner

The plans of four women--including a college student egg donor, a working-class surrogate mother, a wealthy woman, and her stepdaughter--are thrown into turmoil when the wealthy woman's husband suddenly dies and names the stepdaughter the unborn baby's guardian.

Iron House by John Hart

Two decades after a pair of orphaned brothers are separated when one of them flees after a murder accusation, the runaway brother, now a seasoned killer, returns to North Carolina to protect his brother and solve the mystery of their past.

Eyes Wide Open by Andrew Gross

When disaster strikes his older brother Charlie, who once fell under the sway of a deeply disturbed cult-like figure, Jay Erlich is drawn back into his brother's past of secrets, terror, and lies.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

The Lighthouse is a good crime mystery that gives insight to the characters as the plot develops. The book is part of a series in which Commander Adam Dalgiesk of Scotland Yard and his team solves crimes. They are sent to Combe Island to solve a murder. Combe Island, that is privately owned, offers peace and tranquility to those born there or people with power and authority

The author has spent many years in British Civil Service, which includes the Police and Criminal Law Department.

The loss of your memory can be very scary but it seems to benefit the character Alice. The misunderstanding, arguments, miscommunications, lost tempers are all forgotten. The story for Alice becomes a twist of a wonderful life and a reminder for us. Sometimes we forget how fast our children grow, our carefree childhood memories with family and friends and how to live in the moment.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

In 1994, a small Liberal Arts college in Vermont offers a controversial class: a convicted murderer, once a gifted professor, will conduct a class via satellite from his jail cell, called Unraveling a Literary Mystery in which nine of the best and the brightest will try and uncover the true identity of reclusive author Paul Fallows. Alex Shipley quickly realizes that Richard Aldiss’s motive behind teaching this class is hoping to inspire one of his students to follow the clues he gives and prove his innocence. Jump to the present where Alex is Dr. Shipley, a respected English professor at Harvard. She is summoned back to Jasper college where one of the members of Aldiss’s class has been murdered in the same method and same setting as the two murders of which Aldiss was convicted. Alex gathers the other six original members of their group together (one killed himself several years earlier) and they relive the past, realizing someone may be playing The Procedure, a game in which participants reenact one of Fallow’s books, except no one has ever died before. The narrative alternates between 1994 when Alex followed Aldiss’s clues to Iowa, and the present, when she realizes she may not have done such a good thing twenty-five years ago.

In addition to being a suspenseful thriller, Dominance explores the possibilities of good books intriguing and puzzling, being more than a pleasant way to spend the afternoon, but sometimes being twisted for evil. The plot takes several twists and turns, ending up more or less where you might expect, but with one final surprise to leave you hanging. Alex is often aloof and detached, but very driven, making her Aldiss’s perfect choice for whatever game he is playing.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Brothers Michael and Julian were rescued from a near-drowning in a cold, Southern creek, only to spend their early years tormented in an orphanage, Iron House. Michael is the stronger of the two brothers, though they both take their share of beatings from the other boys. When Julian kills one of the boys, Michael takes the blame and runs from the orphanage not knowing that Julian is about to be adopted by a very rich woman who would have also taken Michael. Michael grows up on the streets of New York and is taken in by a crime boss who hardens Michael and makes him tougher than he was before. Julian lives in North Carolina, the son of a Senator, but is an unwell teenager and adult, even though he is a successful author. When Michael denounces his crime family to be with Elena, the woman he loves, two of his “brothers” in the family promise vengeance, threatening not only Elena, pregnant with Michael’s child, but Michael’s brother as well. Michael travels to North Carolina to find Julian and stumbles into something bigger than he, something that will tear down everything he ever believed and ever knew.

Hart is a two-time Edgar winning author who creates an almost gothic atmosphere with a tightly woven plot. There are some clichés (the Senator’s affairs, caught on film, of course) and Elena and Julian, the two most important people to Michael, are not as well-developed as some of the others. There is a mental disorder disclosed near the end of the book that doesn’t fit one of the character’s behavior attributed to the disorder. There are also some graphic scenes that readers may find disturbing. That said, Iron House is a fast-paced read with some interesting twists and turns, some expected, some not, with that brooding wonderful Southern atmosphere for which John Hart is known.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Here are some new titles coming out this week. Check them out from the library and see where they take you…

The Silent Girl by Tess Gerristen (Ballantine)

Discovering primate hair at the scene of a grisly murder in Chinatown, Boston homicide detective Jane Rizzoli and medical examiner Maura Isles discover clues linked to the fable of the Monkey King.

Betrayal of Trust by J.A. Jance (William Morrow)

Seattle investigator J. P. Beaumont uncovers a dark and deadly conspiracy that reaches deep into the halls of state government, in this latest thriller from New York Times bestselling author J. A. Jance.

Never Knowing by Chevy Stevens (St. Martin’s)

Struggling with a need for closure, Sara Gallagher attempts to reconnect with her birth parents only to learn that her biological father is an infamous serial killer, a discovery that causes her to fear she has inherited violent tendencies.

Turn of Mindby Alice LaPlante (Atlantic Monthly Press)

Implicated in the murder of her best friend, Jennifer White, a brilliant retired surgeon with dementia, struggles with fractured memories of their complex relationship and wonders if she actually committed the crime, a situation also marked by her grown children and live-in caretaker. A first novel.

Escape by Barbara Delinsky (Doubleday)

Languishing in her career as a business lawyer after relinquishing her dream to defend victims of corporate abuse, Emily Aulenbach impulsively abandons her husband and returns to a New Hampshire town where she spent a watershed college summer.

Build a Better World

The 11th Annual Adult Summer Reading Club has come to a close.

The club's 157 members have read a total of 1,515 books!

Thank you, all, for your enthusiastic participation.

Quote to Inspire

"Fiction, imaginative work that is, is not dropped like a pebble upon the ground, as science may be; fiction is like a spider’s web, attached ever so lightly perhaps, but still attached to life at all four corners."~Virginia Woolf

11th Annual

To see a larger image of this graph, look through the member reviews. It will usually be posted on Friday afternoons.

How to Use this Blog:

To post a review for a book, please submit it via the "Finished a Book" link from the club's webpage: http://www.hclibrary.us/asrc.htm.

Because all posts & comments must be approved by the library, and because the librarians sometimes take summer vacations too, there will be a delay before you see your submission on the blog. Please be patient; your review will appear.